Curved-Crease Sculpture

(erikdemaine.org)

153 points | by wonger_ 10 hours ago

14 comments

  • hokumguru 8 hours ago
    Eric Demaine is one of the better intersections of origami and mathematics, you should also read up on Dr Robert Lang, the OG and perhaps the most famous American JPL-physicist-turned-origamist: https://langorigami.com/

    On the flip side the late Eric Joisel created perhaps the most amazing curved-crease and natural folding that we’ll ever see, his works were truly amazing art: https://ericjoisel.fr/en/home/

    • jmspring 4 hours ago
      Looking at Lang's site, yes it is a super niche area, but there is a lot of self promotion - books, events, etc. I was first introduced to the general area of curved crease, etc was with David Huffman in the early 90s. He started that work in the early 70s. So, Lang proclaims to the the first, but salesmanship is important.

      Eric himself reconstructs some of huffman's work - https://erikdemaine.org/papers/Huffman_Origami5/paper.pdf

      It's an interesting area.

  • frakt0x90 8 hours ago
    In addition to being great artists, I also learned dynamic programming from this guy via his outstanding lectures: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tp4_UXaVyx8&list=PLJl4xQazDg...

    It looks like there's a more recent series as well: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4-cftqTcdI

  • davidpfarrell 14 minutes ago
    I don't know what I expected to see, but the site was full of ... Curved-Crease Sculptures ...

    Beautiful just the same!

  • srean 5 hours ago
    Curved creases aside, the fact that folding a piece of paper gives you a straight line is itself quite amazing and deep.

    Even if I couldn't trust a cheap ruler, a straight edge is a piece of paper away.

    • ndileas 3 hours ago
      One of the underappreciated causes and effects of the industrial revolution is the precision that's around us all the time. To make that piece of paper required thousands of precision surfaces, rollers, etc.
      • Cerium 2 hours ago
        And oh how we take it for granted. I recently spent a few minutes trying to make sense of a situation where I was using a corner of a paper for a square. It turned out the piece of paper was not at all square, at least a quarter of an inch out of square!
        • bigiain 54 minutes ago
          One important lesson I remember from high school woodworking class ~45 years ago - when using a set square, make your markings twice with the square flipped over in the opposite direction, so if the square isn't accurate you'll get two distinct markings - and for most wood working purposes just splitting the difference by eye will be accurate enough.
      • titanomachy 1 hour ago
        But folding any piece of paper will give you a straight line, no?
  • FuriouslyAdrift 10 hours ago
    Le Klint makes hand folded curved lamp shades that are prtty neat. They have workshops to teach people how to do it, too.

    https://www.leklint.com/collections/pendants/products/le-kli...

  • bdbenton5255 1 hour ago
    Wonderful, a nice meeting place between modern and classical art. Arguably one of the most alluring features of classical art is the complexity and intricacy of detail.
  • TheCoreh 6 hours ago
    These remind me of the Elliptic Curve pieces from another post on the HN front page right now (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44315321) I wonder if the poster was inspired by that one to also post these here?

    Anyway, these are pretty cool/unique looking! I hadn't seen curved origami like this before.

    • wonger_ 5 hours ago
      Actually I was just pruning old bookmarks, and thought people would find this origami interesting. I hadn't seen the elliptic curves post -- thanks!
  • esafak 9 hours ago
    This duo must have the most fun job in all academia.
  • boulos 4 hours ago
    For folks interested in folding and origami, the documentary Between the Folds was excellent. I don't know if anyone recorded a Q&A when it did the film festival circuit, but if you could find one, it'd be worth watching.
  • talkingtab 6 hours ago
    The force from curved folds can be used in other ways. If you score a sheet of copper in a curved line, then fold it along the score you get a twisted form. If you have some poster board handy you can use the same technique as well. Vessels!
  • kazinator 7 hours ago
    > There is a surprisingly old history to curved-crease sculpture, going back to the 1920s at the Bauhaus.

    That's surprisingly recent.

  • boxboxbox4 6 hours ago
    [dead]
  • boxboxbox4 9 hours ago
    [dead]
  • ForrestN 6 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • mrybczyn 5 hours ago
      well, it's no banana duct taped to a canvas, that's for sure...